Thank you for standing by. Good morning. My name is Lara. I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Silvercorp's third quarter fiscal 2023 financial results conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference over to Lon Shaver, Vice President, for opening remarks. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Lara. On behalf of Silvercorp, I'd like to welcome everyone for joining this call to discuss our third quarter fiscal 2023 results, which were released yesterday after market. A copy of the news release, the MD&A, and financial statements for today's call are available on our website and on SEDAR. Before we get started, I'm required to remind you that certain statements on today's call will contain forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Please review the cautionary statements included in our news release and presentation, as well as the risk factors in our most recent 10-Q and Form 40-F and annual information form. To kick it off with a review of our quarterly financial results. With respect to the quarter, revenue in Q3 was $58.7 million.
That's down 1% compared to the prior year quarter, and that's mainly due to a decrease of $4.6 million from lower silver, lead, and zinc prices, but offset by an increase of $4.2 million from higher silver and lead sold. Based on production levels and realized prices in this quarter, silver was 54% of revenues on a net realized basis, the same as in Q3 of last year. Q3 net income attributable to equity shareholders was $11.9 million or $0.07 per share. That compares to a net income of $5.1 million or $0.03 per share in the same period last year.
The main contributor to the gain was an increase of 8% and 12% in silver and lead sales, respectively, a 13% increase in the realized selling price for gold, and a gain of $3 million on equity investments. You'll recall we had a writedown in the previous quarter which affected net income. These were partially offset by a 6% decrease in zinc sales and as I mentioned, lower realized selling prices for silver, lead, and zinc, which decreased 7%, 8% and 13% respectively. We also experienced a foreign exchange loss in this quarter of $800,000, and that was from the depreciation of the U.S. dollar, which occurred over the quarter.
On an adjusted basis, with the adjustments made to remove the impacts of non-cash and unusual items such as impairment charges, share-based compensation, foreign exchange loss, that I mentioned, the share of loss in associates' operating results, gains and losses on investments and one-time items, the earnings for the quarter were $11.8 million or $0.07 per share, which compared to $13.4 million or $0.08 per share in the same period last year. Just a reminder, we're providing this suggested earnings as a supplemental non-GAAP measure to give investors another, metric to better measure the performance of the underlying business, its continuing profitability and growth potential. Our cash flow from operations in the quarter was $25.7 million. That compared to $28.7 million in the prior year quarter.
The decrease was mainly due to the previously mentioned factors on income, offset by a $1.7 million change in non-cash working capital. Before changes in non-cash working capital, our cash flow in the third quarter was $24 million. That's compared to $20.9 million in Q2 of this year, $28 million in Q3 of last year. Capital expenditures totaled approximately $15.6 million in the last quarter, down from $18.7 million in the prior year quarter, mainly due to decreased underground exploration and drilling.
We ended the quarter with $210.3 million in cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments, up from $201 million at the end of last quarter, but down modestly $2.7 million from our March year-end of last year. Again, largely due to a negative $9.9 million translation impact from the appreciation of the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar and Chinese RMB. This cash position does not include our investments in associates and other companies, which had a total market value of $121.8 million as of December 31st. Not necessarily the best ending period to track these investments as obviously we've seen a rebound in the markets here in January.
At December, New Pacific represented $98 million of that $121.8 million. Now we've released our production numbers, but just to give a quick recap. Quarterly production, as we reported, we mined 296,000 tons of ore, milled 303,000 tons of ore. Those were essentially flat compared to the same quarter last year. We produced on a consolidated basis approximately 1.9 million oz of silver, 1,100 oz of gold, 20.1 million lbs of lead, 7 million lbs of zinc in the quarter.
That was increases of 1%, 0%, and 6% in silver, gold, and lead, and a decrease of 13% in zinc production over Q3 fiscal 2022. Sales in the quarter, 1.9 million oz of silver, 1,100 oz of gold, 19.3 million lbs of lead, and 7.1 million lbs of zinc. Those are increases of 8%, flat and 12% respectively in silver, gold, and lead, and a decrease of 6% in zinc sales over the same period last year. The cash cost per ounce of silver, net of byproduct credits, was negative $1.15 in the third quarter compared to a negative $1.33 in the prior year quarter.
The increase in the cost was mainly due to lower byproduct credits, but offset by a decrease in expense production costs. The all-in sustaining cost per ounce of silver, net of byproduct credits, was $9.28 compared to $8.82 in Q3 of fiscal 2022. Increase mainly due to an increase in sustaining capital expenditures, but offset by a decrease in admin expenses and mineral resource tax. Looking at nine-month results, 887,000 tons of ore were mined, and we milled 893,000 tons. Both of those numbers up 9% compared to the prior period.
Year to date, we've sold 5.5 million oz of silver, 3,400 oz of gold, 55.7 million lbs of lead, and 20 million lbs of zinc, represent an increase of 9%, 17%, and 9% respectively in silver, gold, and lead sold, and a decrease of 11% in zinc sold. For the nine-month period, the consolidated cash cost per ounce of silver, net of byproduct credits, was negative $0.68 compared to a negative $1.47 in the same prior year period. Consolidated all-in sustaining cost per ounce of silver for this nine-month period, net of byproduct credits, was $8.94, and that compares to $7.88 in the same prior year period.
Compared to our fiscal 2023 production guidance on a consolidated basis after nine months or 75% of the year, our milling tonnage is at 83% of the target. With respect to the metal production, we've hit 77% of our silver target, 82% of our lead target, but only 60% of our zinc target for the year. Turning to our growth projects, we completed an additional 978 m of drilling during the quarter at the Kuanping project, which is a satellite property located north of Ying that we acquired in November of 2021. Last quarter, we received the Kuanping mining license from the Ministry of Natural Resources, which covers the 6.9 km2 property and is good until March of 2029.
Going forward in this year, fiscal 2024, we're planning to carry out studies to complete the environmental assessment, water and soil protection assessment, and preliminary safety facilities and mine design reports. Further updates on the mine construction plan and cost estimates will be provided once we've completed those reports. As a result of those reports, we should have the permits in hand. As of December 31st, we spent a total of $4 million on the construction of a new 3,000 ton per day flotation mill and the new tailings storage facility at Ying. A total of 2,147 m of drainage tunnels were completed, and the site preparation for the new mill was also substantially completed. The first batch of $4.1 million of milling equipment was ordered.
With regards to permitting, the environmental assessment study report was revised and is pending government approval. This is for the mill. We're fully good to go on the tailings storage facility. Now turning to the fiscal 2024 guidance that we've also provided in this release. As it relates to production costs and capital expenditures in fiscal 2024, we expect to mine and process approximately 1.1 million to 1.17 million tons of ore, which is expected to produce between 4,400 oz to 5,500 oz of gold, 6.8 million to 7.2 million oz of silver, between 70.5 million and 73.8 million lbs of lead, and 27.7 million to 29.7 million lbs of zinc.
This guidance for fiscal 2024 represents anticipated increases of between 3%-8% in ore, flat to up 26% in gold production, between 3% and 8% increase in silver, between 3% and 8% increase in lead, and between 14%-23% in zinc compared to our expected production results completing here in fiscal 2023. In terms of cost guidance for the next year, we're anticipating between $78.2 and $80.5 per ton on a cash cost basis and between $136.4 and $142.4 on an all-in sustaining basis.
Overall CapEx for fiscal 2024 is forecast at $64.7 million, with roughly $21.8 million going towards Ying's equipment and facilities, construction of the tailings storage facility, paste backfill plant, and we're adding an XRT ore sorting system to optimize the mine plan and improve ore processing head grades. The tailings storage facility is expected to be completed in 2024. We're now anticipating completing the new 3,000 ton per day mill at Ying, being delayed by one year and being also completed in calendar 2024. With that, I would like to open the call for questions.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by the number one on your touchtone phone. If you would like to withdraw your request, please press star followed by the number two. One moment, please, for your first question. Your first question comes from the line of Justin Stevens from PI Financial. Please go ahead.
Hello. Good to see the quarterly results, the guidance for next year. I mean fiscal 2024 guidance seems to be pretty positive, I'd say relative to 2023. Costs are trending well on higher production than what I was looking for. I'm just curious, is the drop in dollar per ton costs that you're projecting here due primarily to lower mining costs from mechanization, or is it something else? It seems to be a nice little drop from what you've been looking for for fiscal 2023.
Yeah, that is part of the shift. Really some of that comes down to, you know, already being invested in the tunnels and access. Yeah, as you've noted, we are, you know, with some of the things that have been worked on and looked at, both at GC and Ying, seeing some opportunities to optimize with a bit of a shift in mining methods and also bringing in more mechanization. Obviously, the contributors to those numbers have a lot of factors, exchange rates, you know, cost per ton, you know, for the both tunnel development, ore development, that kind of thing. Overall, those are the numbers we're looking at at this point.
Yeah. On that, I mean, the obviously, you know, kinda the consumables and sort of, the steel and the like that goes in, to the cost here. What have you sort of been seeing, just from what you know, your suppliers in terms of the cost trend? Has this sort of, input stabilized, or have you seen a bit of a drop, or is it just sort of, keeping steady with what you had last year?
I'd say for the most part, things are pretty steady. I think we've seen a few, you know, normal increases on RMB terms, on a few items, but nothing really alarming and nothing sort of over what we saw and anticipated when we gave, you know, guidance last year for this year on some key items. There really hasn't been a ton of changes. You know, obviously in both from a, you know, quarter period, even within the quarter, if you look at exchange rates and things, you know, what we end up reporting in U.S. dollars can fluctuate, based on that RMB to U.S. dollar rate.
For sure. Yeah. With, just to make sure I've got my timing right here, the deferral of the mill three here by a year, so should we be now expecting that to be commissioned maybe like the end of calendar 2024 and then ramping up, I guess, properly in fiscal 2026?
Yes. That's right.
Okay.
Yeah.
Got it. Obviously it's good to see the receipt of the Kuanping permit. Maybe can you just give a bit more detail if you guys are planning to do more drilling there, or is the focus really on the studies before coming back with any more exploration?
I think the drilling is pretty much wrapped up there, with the mining permit. Really now it's kind of more just an administrative thing to come back. There's sort of a checklist of, you know, a safety assessment, preliminary, you know, mine design and safety facilities design that has to get submitted. There's, you know, sort of routine soil and water protection assessment reports in terms of what you know, how you say you're gonna address issues. Overall an environmental assessment report and you know, then that leads to getting those things signed off that you can then, you know, get into actual, you know, mine site construction and ramping it.
For sure. No, that makes sense. I mean, on that, the obviously, I think the dovetailing of the timing there with the new mill would make sense. You know, obviously it's even if it's relatively straightforward, just so you like say, walk through the checklist that you need to get approvals here, I'm assuming that, yeah, the timeline that you'd be looking at for any potential production out of that wouldn't be till the new mill is up and running.
Well, we actually could see ore, I think, earlier than that.
Okay.
It's just a matter though, like I said, of getting those reports done, getting in and, you know, really working through the mine plan to see sort of what's a, you know, a healthy rate of production, you know, based on, you know, what you see when you get underground, the way the resources and reserves are oriented. I think we could see it earlier than that. But, really the timing of Kuanping isn't really the factor as it relates to the mill. I think really what we've identified is that there's opportunities, you know, in the meantime, to really focus on some, you know, some mine optimization.
You know, ironically, it's some of the work that's been done at GC has led to looking at implementing some of these technologies at Ying. You know, it's more getting the mine at Ying and some of the facilities ready. You'll notice that, looking at Ying in terms of the numbers, both this year and next year, we've got some healthy spending and work plans on terms of ramping. Some of that ramp is to really open up and access more areas within all of the mines at Ying and, you know, really streamline the ability to up the production rate in the future.
Got it. Just one last one from me. Any plans to what should we expect, sort of, in terms of the reserve and resource update? Obviously, you guys have been sort of, you know, doing tech reports for Ying, which has been good to see. Are you planning to do sort of a regular annual update here to bring some of the obviously the new drilling in, or is that just gonna be sort of ad hoc?
Well, typically, what our general policy had been was to do one a year and alternate between, GC and Ying. Obviously, with just having done the Ying report, that we, you know, published last September, it might be, you know, early, to go back and tackle Ying again. You know, as... I think that remains open to see whether or not we've got real fundamental changes in terms of what we see in the numbers.
Got it. Perfect.
Yeah.
That's it for me. Thanks.
To Justin. Yep. Thanks, Justin. Appreciate it.
Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Joseph Reagor from ROTH MKM. Please go ahead.
Hey, Lon and team. Thanks for taking the questions.
No, thanks, Joe.
A lot of stuff I wanted to touch on already was, but, on the mill delay, is there any other color you can give us as to why? Is it a matter of, like, timing of equipment or just things have taken longer than expected or impacts from COVID or what? Like, what was the reason for the push out by a year?
Well, I think we kind of communicated in the last call that some of the, some of the face time necessary to, you know, to deal with moving things ahead just wasn't happening because of, you know, inability to travel. Now, you know, back on that and the plan is definitely to push through what we're, you know, calling largely ad-administrative items to get the final permits. You know, in the meantime, you realize that there's sort of other things that you know, can and should do within the mines themselves to get tuned up. The tailings storage facility is obviously a priority for the long term. You know, you know, we know there's a lot more tons that we're gonna be, you know, pushing through, you know, whatever mills we're running.
We definitely have to get moving on that. That's a priority. I think it's just really a prioritization of management time and effort. As I said, there's some opportunities that we see to work on addressing the mines with the paste backfill plants going in with the first one going in at probably the LMW mine. The sorting that we're gonna put in at that we've been putting in and are gonna finish up at GC, we're gonna put that XRT sorter in at the TLP mine, which will probably address or be used for the ore from TLP and both LMW and LME.
When you look at those sorts of things, the ramp development, I think that it was just viewed that let's work on some of those aspects, you know, prior to, you know, pushing ahead with a mill, which will obviously, you know, consume a lot of people's time and attention.
For the mill, what's the remaining capital to be spent on the whole project?
I mean, largely the bulk of it. You know, we've ordered equipment, but we haven't paid for it. It hasn't been delivered. That spending for the mill and the tailings facility, you know, as we disclosed, was up to $4 million combined as of the end of December.
Mm-hmm.
We have the bulk of, you know, the roughly $70 million combined for both to spend.
Okay. All right. That's helpful. I'll turn it over.
Okay. Thanks, Joe.
Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Felix Shafigullin from Eight Capital. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you. Yeah, congratulations on the quarter, Lon. Most of my questions have actually been answered, but I just wanted to, I was just curious, you know, I'm seeing some very pronounced drops in mining and milling costs, you know, sort of in the latest quarter compared to the previous ones. Could you give a little bit of color on that? Like, what's behind that?
Well, some of that relates to, if you're referring to the, in the mining cost, some of that relates to, from development tunnels and access. You know, we had said that we were looking to, you know, shift some of our priorities, you know, in the past from, you know, more development exploration tunnels that get expensed to drilling. You know, we're now several years into drilling, you know, fairly aggressive programs. You know, the main focus of that was to identify the near term reserves in the mine plan that already had easy access to them, so that we could be mining material without, you know, those development costs.
I think that's probably the, sort of the largest shift other than, you know, as I mentioned, you know, changes in exchange rates and things like that have had an impact on costs.
It's mainly change in exchange rate and the fact that, you know, I guess, more drilling is getting capitalized as opposed to expense.
Well, it's not just that it's being capitalized, it's the fact that from a mine planning standpoint, there's been a major exercise at the mines to go and say, "All right, let's look at the quality of the resources we have, the reserves that we have, and determine from a prioritization standpoint, you know, where is the material that we have that is sort of ready to be mined, you know, in one month, three months, six months?" You know, do that based off of the, you know, the existing access we have underground and the drilling so that we can then go and say, "Look, let's take a bit of a break here on some of the tunneling access, you know, cut back on some of that cost because we know where the near-term material is coming from.
Okay, that makes sense. Okay, thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, should you have a question, please press star followed by the number one. Your next question comes from the line of Gabriel Gonzalez from Echelon Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, Lon. Thank you for taking our questions. I was just wondering, I've noted that the recent Ying technical report and prior quarters MD&A didn't mention the XRT in the backfill plant as part of the capital projects pipeline. I was just wondering if these were always considered part of that pipeline, but just with the delay to the plant, it's worth mentioning them explicitly as part of what you're doing. Or are these effectively new items that have been brought on, I suppose, in lieu of the delay or in view of the delay to the plant expansion?
Well, they're definitely new items as it relates to Ying, but I think, you know, as we get experience and see things and obviously, you know, GC last quarter had, you know, posed some challenges. Some of the work that, you know, has been done at GC, you know, was to bring in that XRT to help, you know, upgrade the material, you know, out of the mine before it went to the mill. As we look at things and we look at trends and, you know, opportunities, the ability to bring in some of this technology on what I'd say is fairly modest, you know, capital expenditure items, are ways to just, you know, fine-tune the mine plan and the cost profile.
Mm-hmm.
So while they weren't contemplated before, you know, we're, you know, we're constantly as a group, a team looking at, well, what are, what are trends? You know, we touched on the call ability to add some mechanization and decrease a bit of the labor intensity that is, you know, being considered. Because obviously, as was raised on this, on this call, everybody's worried about cost inflation, whether that be consumables, energy or labor. As, as we see, you know, areas where we can tweak and fine-tune and adjust, you know, we're gonna do that.
We haven't, you know, really sort of put a lot of airtime on this, but, you know, as anyone who's followed the Ying mines has known that we've gone from, you know, having more shrinkage to moving to cut-and-fill resuing. Now we're actually seeing an opportunity to move back to shrinkage because from a productivity standpoint, the numbers are higher. Then if you combine that with an XRT, you know, you can, you know, you can make up for some of the additional dilution you might face in that shift in mining method, but not, you know, hurt what the actual mill grades are.
Mm-hmm. Okay.
Long-winded answer, you know, these are new opportunities and new things that we see that we can, you know, add to the mix.
Yeah, sure. No, I think that's, it's always good to weigh technology and the benefits where it's appropriate. I was just wondering in regards to the XRTs used at the GC mine, do you have a maybe a ballpark figure of what the NPV of that item would have looked like at the end in terms of the impact that it's making? Do you also have an estimate of what that benefit, NPV benefit might be to using it at the Ying mine?
I don't have those numbers handy. I mean, you can see from a, from a cost standpoint, it's a pretty nominal cost.
Mm-hmm.
to, to bring it in. Yeah, so I don't, I don't have a solid number in terms of what the, you know, the actual NPV contribution to that is. Obviously we think there's an opportunity there to combine that with, you know, some of the mining shifts that we've seen, but not, you know, use up or work ourselves out of the, the current capacity, you know, that we have with, mill number one and two.
Yeah. Yeah. No, no problem at all. I was more just out of curiosity, you know, recognizing there it is, it is a modest capital cost. I had just been curious about the IRR and NPV, that's all fine. Thank you very much for taking my questions.
No, thanks, Gabriel. Thanks for joining.
Thank you. This concludes the question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Lon Shaver, Vice President, for any closing remarks.
That's great. Thank you, Lara, for hosting the call, and thanks to everyone for tuning in today. That's it for this call. Please, if you have any additional questions, as always, please reach out by phone or email, and I'd be happy to answer. We look forward to connecting next time for our call for our year-end results for the end of fiscal 2023. Thanks very much. Have a great day.
Thank you, sir. This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating, and have a blessed day.